Before I begin Part 3, I wanted to add two links that illustrate recent examples of Western governments deliberately concealing raw climate data as well as how the numbers you do get to see are “corrected” in order to produce a result that affirms a global warming trend.
And now on to Part 3
QUESTION: If human activity and emissions are not to blame, what is responsible for the climate fluctuations we see?
Several things on that.
First, there’s the Sun. There’s been a lot of hullabaloo over this theory lately, but contrary to Luke McKinney’s characterization that common sense in global warming dictates that we first look at the “six billion monkeys setting fire to things,” it seems far more reasonable that when things warm up, the first place we should look is skyward. We know that sunspot and flare activity move in cycles. When looked at in isolation, however, it does appear that it cannot be responsible for the entire effect we see on our climate. That is still a far cry from saying “human emitted CO2 must therefore be primarily responsible.” After all, the Sun theory isn’t supported by findings from, oh, say, NASA, or somesuch…oh, wait…it is.
Second, there’s the Earth itself. Natural and cyclical irregularities in the Earth’s magnetic field are the likely culprit in “holes in the ozone.”
There is currently a very large area over the South Atlantic where the field is so weak that harmful radiation from the Sun can now penetrate low enough to disrupt equipment on commercial airliners. This necessitates routing satellites around the “hole” or turning them off while they coast through it in order to protect their equipment. So our “armor” that keeps out harmful radiation from the Sun has some large holes that let in far more than was traditionally thought – and it is cyclical (ie. worse now than in previous decades).
There is the genuine (possibly “likely”?) possibility that there is no “crisis” at all. We stand at the confluence of effects of natural cycles of Sun, Earth and atmosphere, all of which can have surprising amplification effects on each other. Dr. Patterson offers evidence that the sun-critics missed some important factors that amplify the effect of the sun, and his data is borne out over the long-term. In other words, it’s back by “real science” and, unlike most CO2 models out there, the results actually fit the theory without massive “corrections” needed to manufacture the desired result.
Next up: So why are so many so invested in advancing “manmade global climate change?”
